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		<title>Is seaweed farming boom a climate solution or ecological threat?</title>
		<link>https://corporateknights.com/climate/is-seaweed-farming-a-climate-solution-or-ecological-threat/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Eve Andrews]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 2024 15:03:55 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Climate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spring 2024]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seaweed]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://corporateknights.com/?p=40847</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>As kelp farms spread across North America, experts question whether their climate benefits are worth the potential risks</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://corporateknights.com/climate/is-seaweed-farming-a-climate-solution-or-ecological-threat/">Is seaweed farming boom a climate solution or ecological threat?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://corporateknights.com">Corporate Knights</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In 1983, a French oceanographic research institute invited an invader to the country’s northern shores. The Japanese seaweed wakame, which grows in fettuccine-like ochre ribbons, had already made itself at home on the French Mediterranean coast after hitching a ride on an oyster boat from Asia in the 1970s. But the decision to introduce this foreign breed of kelp to three islands off the coast of Brittany was made with the intention of farming it as a commodity.</p>
<p>Researchers from IFREMER (Institut Français de Recherche pour l’Exploitation de la Mer) found that the wakame had colonized a nearby mussel farm in 1987. In the years that followed, it had taken over parts of the northern Atlantic coast of Spain, England’s southern coast, and the Channel Islands. By the turn of the century, the invasive variety of brown kelp had expanded its territory all the way up to the Netherlands.</p>
<p>This is kind of a worst-case scenario of seaweed cultivation: a farmed species takes over the ecosystem and transforms the native forests, disrupting all kinds of organisms that depend on them. As the seaweed aquaculture industry develops up and down the coasts of North America, state and provincial governments have passed strict laws to prevent the introduction of invasive species like Japanese wakame to our waters. But scientists and regulators are still trying to understand how cultivated and wild seaweed populations interact with each other – and how much we need to protect the latter.</p>
<p>Wild seaweed harvesting has been a tiny, niche industry in North America for decades, driven largely by boutique and <a href="https://corporateknights.com/uncategorized/making-seaweed-mainstream/">health food purveyors and experimental chefs</a>. But about six or seven years ago, Maine harvester Micah Woodcock noticed an explosion in interest in farming seaweed, with new businesses making dual claims of saving the planet and feeding the world. He never anticipated how trendy his product would become. “But I am not the biggest cheerleader for some of the large-scale seaweed projects going on,” he says.</p>
<p>Concerns shared by several ocean conservationists, ecologists and harvesters stem from the failures of agriculture on dry land. The fear is that mammoth seaweed farms will mimic the sprawling fields of wheat, corn and soy that have eroded the ecosystems of the North American prairies. But where is the ostensible seaweed boom – and the demand for such mammoth farms – coming from?</p>
<h4>Seaweed the ‘wonder crop’</h4>
<p>Seaweed is a bafflingly versatile ingredient, and it’s cropping up everywhere: from the snack aisles of Whole Foods to expensive moisturizers at Sephora. Asian producers dominate the global seaweed farming industry, <a href="https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/099081423104548226/pdf/P175786073c14c01609fe409c202ddf12d0.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener">at about 98%</a> of the estimated <a href="https://www.polarismarketresearch.com/industry-analysis/commercial-seaweeds-market#:~:text=The%20global%20Commercial%20Seaweed%20market,2.6%25%20during%20the%20forecast%20period" target="_blank" rel="noopener">US$9.9-billion market</a>. That’s largely because East Asian diets include a lot of seaweed. And even though North American interest in alaria algae, sugar kelp and dulse has taken off, it’s still nowhere near the demand of Japanese, Chinese or Korean markets.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, North American mariculture operations have gotten tens of millions in funding from venture capital and governments in just the past few years. That’s because seaweed has a wide variety of purposes beyond the culinary: its ability to be put to work as a low-carbon ingredient of biofuels, bioplastics and fertilizers; its role as a methane-reducing cattle feed; and perhaps most of all, as government subsidies for carbon credits expand, its “blue carbon” potential to sequester emissions.</p>
<p>But seaweed’s entry into carbon markets is still pretty tentative. The theory behind kelp as a carbon sink is akin to the idea that a billion trees can save us from climate change: the logic is there, but the implementation is lacking. Seaweed grows very quickly – much, much faster than a tree – and its rapid photosynthesis eats up carbon with the appetite of a teenage boy. But the scale at which seaweed would have to be grown to achieve meaningful carbon sequestration would require <a href="https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/06/15/1074892/seaweed-farming-for-carbon-dioxide-capture-would-take-up-too-much-of-the-ocean/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">millions of square kilometres of farms</a>, according to a 2023 Nature study. And there may be unintended consequences on neighbouring ecosystems.</p>
<p>“You might be in for some nasty surprises,” says Louis Druehl, a veteran seaweed scientist and “kelp godfather” on Vancouver Island. As a crop, seaweed’s real environmental benefits come from its ability to neutralize acidifying waters and sequester nitrogen, both of which protect a litany of ocean creatures from the harms of climate change and industrial runoff.</p>
<p>Kelp has also been touted as a crop that can boost coastal economies that have suffered from overfishing, pollution and warming waters. That argument has been largely applied to Indigenous aquaculturists in North America’s Pacific Northwest, some of which are diversifying shellfish farms threatened by acidification by adding kelp to their growing operations. One of those is the Klahoose First Nation, which manages several shellfish farms around Cortes Island, B.C. The community <a href="https://www.nationalobserver.com/2021/05/17/news/coastal-first-nation-gets-taste-success-seaweed" target="_blank" rel="noopener">recently partnered with</a> Cascadia Seaweed, a buzzy Vancouver Island–based B Corp that has raised millions of dollars on its promise of seaweed aquaculture as a climate solution.</p>
<h4>Small price to pay?</h4>
<p>Seaweed farmers say that there’s a gaping chasm between the scale at which the industry poses a threat to wild ecosystems and how it functions today. Cascadia, for example, is the largest brown-seaweed farmer in Canada, at about 25 hectares of production.</p>
<p>“There’s a debate between conservationists and speculators: what happens to genetic diversity on these thousand-acre farms?” says Bren Smith, who operates a seaweed and shellfish farm in Connecticut and founded the non-profit GreenWave to educate other ocean farmers in the region to grow seaweed sustainably. “The rest of us farming are like, ‘What are you guys talking about?’ That’s the fictional stage. And we’re all operating in nonfiction – we’re trying to figure this out in the water, as wild kelp forests are dying around the world.”</p>
<p>Current regulations require that American seaweed farms grow their crops from wild native specimens, like sugar kelp in New England and bull kelp in Alaska. Divers collect tissue from native stocks around the site of the farm, and seeds from those samples are then cultivated into spores and planted on ropes underwater.</p>
<p>This practice was developed in part because of the research of Charles Yarish, who was one of the first American scientists to study the potential for seaweed aquaculture – and how to avoid introducing potentially harmful strains to wild stocks. “We started doing the genetics of populations of seaweeds in southern New England, and also in the Gulf of Maine,” Yarish says. “And we found out there are genetic differences between the populations, so we don’t mix them. We want to be very, very careful and respect the environment.”</p>
<p>Genetic diversity in wild populations is what keeps them resilient to disease, pollution, and warming or acidifying water, and cultivated seaweed populations – much like other farmed crops – tend to be more homogeneous. The conservationist concern is whether spores from cultivated plants could float off and reproduce among wild strands and weaken the resilience of native stocks.</p>
<p>Druehl participated in a literature review to find evidence of farmed seaweed contaminating the gene pool of its wild brethren in Maine. While there’s no recorded case of this contamination occurring, he says there’s no reason to assume it couldn’t happen.</p>
<p>“I think the problems will be quite small and very easy to mitigate,” Druehl says.</p>
<p>Alaska, for example, requires farmers to take seeds from 50 different plants within 50 kilometres of a farm, specifically to protect genetic diversity. But some of seaweed farming’s more enthusiastic proponents have argued that this kind of stringent regulation hinders the growth of the industry.</p>
<blockquote><p>You might be in for some nasty surprises.</p>
<p>-Louis Druehl, a veteran seaweed scientist</p></blockquote>
<p>Furthermore, there’s a complicating factor to propagating kelp from seed taken from the wild: native forests are collapsing and migrating as their home waters warm. One possible solution is the development of seed banks to preserve native specimens that farmers can use to propagate crops. Publicly owned <a href="https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3000641" target="_blank" rel="noopener">seed banks</a> could help the seaweed industry evade the threat of monoculture<br />
farming, where corporations control the supply of seed to farmers.</p>
<p>They also offer the opportunity for a development that could raise some alarm bells for the conservation contingent: selectively bred kelp for farms. Yarish has helped to orchestrate a germplasm collection – bits of seed and tissue from different species and strains of seaweed – that researchers at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the University of Connecticut and the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences will use to sequence and breed for resilient crops.</p>
<p>“We can see the impacts on the native populations,” Yarish says, “and we haven’t detected any negative impact.”</p>
<p>The landscape of seaweed farming showcases a very familiar debate in climate mitigation and adaptation about how much we should leave truly wild and how much we should help nature along. And, ultimately, do we have to choose between reducing carbon emissions and protecting the integrity of certain ecosystems?</p>
<p>“There might be a small price to pay along the coast to resolve the bigger problem – would you be willing to make that trade-off?” says Druehl.</p>
<p><em>Eve Andrews is an environmental journalist based in Pittsburgh.</em></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://corporateknights.com/climate/is-seaweed-farming-a-climate-solution-or-ecological-threat/">Is seaweed farming boom a climate solution or ecological threat?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://corporateknights.com">Corporate Knights</a>.</p>
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		<title>What if kelp forests can save the oceans?</title>
		<link>https://corporateknights.com/water/seaweed-forests-save-the-oceans-kelp/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Tara Lohan]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jun 2023 14:42:23 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Water]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kelp]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ocean economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seaweed]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://corporateknights.com/?p=37547</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Seaweed has acted as fertilizer, food and medicine. Now researchers are beginning to tally more of its environmental benefits.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://corporateknights.com/water/seaweed-forests-save-the-oceans-kelp/">What if kelp forests can save the oceans?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://corporateknights.com">Corporate Knights</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Floridians are bracing for an unwanted visitor this summer: sargassum. A <a href="https://www.npr.org/2023/05/05/1174024003/sargassum-giant-seaweed-blob-florida" target="_blank" rel="noopener">5,000-mile-long island</a> of this rootless seaweed is floating around the Atlantic, and large swathes of it are expected to wash ashore in Florida and other states in the coming months. Smaller amounts have already arrived, and the rotting clumps of algae on the beach release hydrogen sulfide, giving off the smell of rotten eggs.</p>
<p>A large landfall will be a health hazard — and a deterrent for tourists and nesting sea turtles alike. It’s also expected to cost communities millions in lost revenue and cleanup.</p>
<p>Out at sea, sargassum isn’t bad: It’s a life raft and food pantry for a variety of ocean organisms. It’s also a reminder of the myriad benefits that algae can provide.</p>
<p>Kelp, in particular, is having a moment.</p>
<p>“Kelp” is a loose designation that encompasses roughly 100 species of brown seaweeds that grow in the cool waters along nearly one-third of the world’s coastlines. The thick algae form underwater forests, providing food and refuge for numerous animals, as well as numerous environmental benefits.</p>
<p>Kelp forests are one of the “most widespread and valuable marine ecosystems on the planet,” according to a United Nations Environment Programme <a href="https://wedocs.unep.org/handle/20.500.11822/42255" target="_blank" rel="noopener">report</a> released in April.</p>
<p>New initiatives aim to tap these resources. But before we can reap the benefits, we need to ensure kelp forests aren’t destroyed.</p>
<h3><strong>The benefits</strong></h3>
<p>Kelp has been applied as fertilizer, <a href="https://corporateknights.com/uncategorized/making-seaweed-mainstream/">eaten as food</a>, and used medicinally by coastal peoples for thousands of years. Now researchers are beginning to tally more of its environmental benefits.</p>
<p>Kelp provides habitat and food for ocean dwellers like abalone, lobsters, crabs, octopuses, fish, sea otters, sea lions and whales. It also helps reduce damage from storms, stores carbon, produces oxygen and reduces nutrient pollution in the ocean.</p>
<p>A new <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-37385-0#:~:text=Globally%2C%20kelp%20forests%20provide%20habitat,marine%20nutrient%20pollution9%2C10." target="_blank" rel="noopener">study</a> in <em>Nature</em> <em>Communications</em> found that kelp forests contribute about $500 billion globally to fisheries production, carbon capture, and nutrient-pollution reduction, which can help limit toxic algal blooms and improve water quality. When it comes to mitigating climate change, the researchers estimated that kelp forests sequester nearly 5 megatons of carbon from the atmosphere annually. That’s roughly the emissions from burning 2 billion gallons of gasoline.</p>
<p>This is probably news to most people.</p>
<p>“While kelp forests are valued to some degree by ocean users, they are not perceived to be high-value ecosystems to the public, which can limit public support for kelp conservation and restoration,” the study’s researchers wrote. “We found that kelp forests are on average over 3 times more valuable than previously acknowledged and expect these evaluations to increase as more market and non-market services are assessed.”</p>
<p>Tallying economic contributions, they say, isn’t meant to commodify kelp forests but to help spur conservation efforts and draw attention from policymakers who have overlooked these important ecosystems.</p>
<p>“To date, no global legal or policy instruments have focused explicitly on kelp,” the U.N. report found. “There are, however, many international frameworks and national laws and policies in place that could, in principle, support the conservation and effective management of kelp.”</p>
<p>If we are to draw on those, it will need to happen quickly.</p>
<h3><strong>The threats</strong></h3>
<p>Kelp forests across the world are in decline. Around half have been degraded in the past 50 years by a combination of local pressures and climate change. Nutrients, pollutants and sediments that wash into coastal waters from urban developments and agriculture can harm kelp forests.</p>
<p>Climate change also poses big challenges.</p>
<p>Kelp thrive in cool waters and are stressed by marine heat waves and ocean warming. More extensive losses of kelp forests are being found at the warm ends of its ranges. Climate change is also causing kelp species that like warmer water to replace those that prefer colder temperatures, causing a shift in the composition and diversity of kelp forests. In some cases, kelp forests are losing out altogether to <a href="https://daily.jstor.org/turf-algae-and-kelp-forests/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">mats of turf algae</a>, which don’t provide the same nutrients and habitat complexity.</p>
<p>Warming ocean temperatures are also changing the distribution and abundance of animals that eat kelp. So has hunting or overfishing of their predators. Sea urchins, for example, have been blamed for overgrazing kelp forests in Alaskan waters after their predators — sea otters — were hunted extensively.</p>
<p>One imbalance in the ocean can create another.</p>
<p>“Destructive grazing of kelp has been recorded among many different kinds of herbivores including sea urchins, fish, crustaceans and snails,” the U.N. report found.</p>
<h3><strong>The opportunity</strong></h3>
<p>Indigenous peoples have harvested kelp for thousands of years, and many continue to do so. It’s also become the fastest-growing segment of the aquaculture industry.</p>
<p>That’s because a kelp extract called alginic acid, also referred to as algin or alginate, can be used as a thickening and emulsifying agent. It’s found in animal feed, pharmaceuticals, toothpastes, shampoos, salad dressings, frozen foods, dairy products, paper, charcoal and more.</p>
<p>But ensuring kelp forests continue to provide important environmental functions means that harvesting wild and cultivated kelp needs to be done sustainably, which isn’t always the case. The U.N. report called attention to unsustainable methods, including industrial harvesting in Norway where trawlers tear kelp from the seafloor, leaving 10-foot-wide gouges. This not only destroys kelp but can harm invertebrates and fish who depend on it, as well as the birds who eat them.</p>
<p>As kelp industries grow, policymakers in the United States hope to provide some ground rules. In March Rep. Jared Huffman of California and Rep. Mary Peltola of Alaska introduced the <a href="https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/1461/text?s=1&amp;r=1" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Coastal Seaweed Farm Act of 2023</a>, which calls on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Department of Agriculture to “carry out a study on coastal seaweed farming, issue regulation relating to such farming, and establish an Indigenous seaweed farming fund.”</p>
<p>The latter would help reduce the cost barriers for Indigenous communities to participate in coastal seaweed farming and use the methods to help restore ecological functions.</p>
<p>“We also want to ensure equity in this field so that Indigenous people can continue benefiting from the industry — so our bill creates a grant program to reduce cost barriers for native communities, many of whom have farmed seaweed for thousands of years,” Huffman said in a statement.</p>
<p>Globally, other efforts are underway as well. The <a href="https://kelpforestalliance.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Kelp Forest Alliance</a> aims to protect and restore nearly 10 million acres of kelp forests by 2040. “This is a call for governments to meet their commitments to the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and act now to save these ecosystems,” Aaron Eger, lead author of the <em>Nature Communications</em> study and founder of the alliance, <a href="https://theconversation.com/a-forgotten-and-neglected-ecosystem-covers-a-third-of-earths-coastlines-with-a-collective-value-of-500-billion-203908" target="_blank" rel="noopener">wrote</a> in <em>The Conversation</em>.</p>
<p>Kelp needs much more.</p>
<p>The U.N. report provides a list of recommendations, including: taking action to address climate change; investing in mapping and long-term monitoring of kelp forests; better quantifying the ecosystem functions kelp forests provide and how they’re affected by climate change and other human pressures; incentivizing kelp protection and restoration through a monetary value on carbon; assessing practices used for harvesting and making necessary changes; using existing international frameworks to recognize kelp forest values and threats; and ensuring broad partnerships and stakeholder involvement, including with women, local communities, and Indigenous communities.</p>
<p>“The battle to save our kelp forests is just getting started,” wrote Eger. “And we need greater action to protect these intrinsically and economically valuable marine ecosystems.”</p>
<p><em>This story was originally published by <a href="https://therevelator.org/kelp-ocean/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">The Revelator</a> and is part of <a class="external-link" href="https://coveringclimatenow.org/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Covering Climate Now</a>, a global journalism collaboration strengthening coverage of the climate story.</em></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://corporateknights.com/water/seaweed-forests-save-the-oceans-kelp/">What if kelp forests can save the oceans?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://corporateknights.com">Corporate Knights</a>.</p>
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